Democratic Sentinel, Volume 8, Number 11, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 11 April 1884 — Page 1
VOLUME vm.
■ HE DEMOCRATIC SENTIHEL. HI A DEMOCRATIC NEWSPAPER. * §lll PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY, |H BY ■ as. W. McEwen. IgBMHB >— H KJLT&S OF SUBSCRIPTION. |H ieyo»r g 1.50 imontln 75. SB ••€!«•> Um 50 Advertising Rates. fine vOiutUA, one year, $«o ftO Half column, <« •) ©uart*r . " “ H v« 1* UO MB Feu per ®*»t. Added to pMes 11 UH are feet to occupy »or* tiiaa *■ ucfo «•!«*« wilt*. fTactionaJ parts of a year at aguitubte rates Wm pusinefes card# »ot exceeding 1 Inch s»aee, A , .“ ar i®* f . cr « ix M*xtb* ;J J for three ■H A" *J4f hotiees and ad vertistweaU «t •» MB: *Habed dtatuteprice. 0 MSB e »dia< notices, ii-jt publieatlon it teats Hue; aaea publication thereafter s teats a HHpearly advertisement* may be eha«tf*d BMBnarterly (enee in three jnontit) at the *p®f the adve.’tiwer, free *f extra ebaa'ge. HB : «rv T4irtiseai,ißt,s fer persons not residents Jasper eoiuity, must be paid for la ad- ® <P n bWe vtion, when less than ■n«-«uuttf eolaiaa iaetae; aud <uarMclr M i aiwu» when larger.
UIORDECAI F. CHULOOTE. ■ - leorrat ■ ractices fin the Courts of Jatpfer and ad- ■ Mnlng counties. Makes colleetions a specialty. Office on north side of Washingtoi ■ treet, opposite Court H euse- vlul B .B.DWIGOINA ZIMBI nwitety. B R. *. & Z. DWIGGINS. ■ ■A.ttoriaey-e-a.t-lua.w, H vEXSSELAER ” *"* 5 - IMJDIAMA ■ ’ractice in the Courts of Jasper and ad ■ iiuDiK coun ti e s. make collections, etc. t« ■ Olnee west corner Nowels’Block. v„nl ■ ZMONP. THOMPSON, DAVID J. THOM P6OX B Attorney-at-Law. Notary Public.. Hl THOMPSON & BSOTHJEB., - - . Indiana H Pruetjceiji aJljths Courts. IiWUON L. SPITLER. ■ Collector and Abstractor. ■ %ve pay, irticular attention to paying taxB .sellinn and leasing lands. v 2 nts . ■ | FRANK ». H. .A6CJL, at | And Beal Estate Broker. ■toftdices In ail Court* pf Jasper, New tor ■tod Benton counties. Lgndg examined ■Bstracts of Title prepared: Taxes paid. I Colleetieaaj* a, «y»cl«,lty. I JAMES W. DOUTHIT, ■*fTORNEYs*T-LAW AND NOTARY PUBLIC, B>gl.”"£V t P Beßfctlna. 8 e ß fctlna. I H. W. lAt torney at Law I Remington, Indiana. ■ COLLECTIONS A SPECIALTY. I IRA W. YEOMAN, I Attorney at Law, I NOTARY PUBLIC, I Real Estate and Collecting Agent. I 'Jill practice in all the Courts of Newton I Benton and Jasper counties. Office:— Up-stairs, over Murray’s Cit’ I flrug Store, Goodland, Indiana. " Dd. dale, • ATTOKNEY-AT LAW MONTICELLO, • laaiAMA. Bank building, up stairs. - - I. H. LOUGHBIDGE. F. P, BITTERS LOUGHRIDGE & BITTERS, Physicians and Surgeons, Washington street, below Austin’s hotel. Ten per cent, interest will be added to all accounts running unsettled longer than three months. vlni *-•' —-r - ■ - r- i—. . . ' . DR. I. B. WASHBURN, Physician & Surgeon, Rensselaer Ind. * □alls promptly attended. Will give speoia) alter cion to the treatment ®f Chronic Obeo****.
R. S. Dwiggins. Zimri Dwl<gi Ba , Prtaidtnt. Cttahici. Citizens’ Hank, RENSSELAER, IND., noe» a general Banking business; gives special Attention to <-»'leetfewu;r*uiftuwoe* *iade en day of i. 4UI) ~| l( at. •vrreat ofexchange;Jut-:, u bgi.aieucertificates bearing interest issued; exRninge bought and sold. * This Bank owns the Bu-elar Safe, which ’’Xt’P* a M , at . the Chicago Exposition <k Hit. Thia Safe Is protected by of wpgent s Time Locks. The bunk.vaultused K 1 * £? O< J a “ ® tt P xt will be >«t ( ■bm thn foregolsg that this Hank furnishe’l C 6 good sacur’t> to depositees as can be. ALFRED M COT, THOMIB THOWPSO* Ranking Hohka AF A. MgCOY & T. THOMPSON, successors y to A, MS Coy * A. Thompson. Bankers,' Rensselaer, Ind. Does general Banking business Buy and sell exchaogo. made sn all available points. Money loaned literest. paid on specified time deposits &c Office same place us old firm of A ? . McCoy & 4 Thompson. aprU.’sl 1
The Democratic Sentinel.
THOMAS J. m. Bods, Shoes, Hals, Caps,
L wrSSO, mSALS 9T THOMAS J. FARDEN, 3 Doors East of P. O. Rensselaer, Ind. A complete liae ot light and heavy shoes for men and bojs, women and misses, always in stock at bottom prices. Increase of trade more an object than large profits. See our goods before buying. .
Gents’ Furnishing Goods!
N WARNER & SONS . DEALERS IN Hardware, Tinware Bduih Side Washington Street RBIH«SBX.ABB, - - IMDIAIHA « una'^.-L 1 11'1 !>' I- J Ilin J lI.WJ lia. I I ■ WWWWW BM & WARNOT, Dealers In Groceries, Tinware, W oodenware, Farm Machinery, BRICK & TILE. Our Groceries are pure, and will be sold as low as elsewhere. (n our Hardware, Tinware and Woodenware Department, will be found everything called for. Our’Farm Machinery, in great variety, of the most approved styles. Brick and Tile, manufactured by us, and kept constantly on hand. We respectfully solicit your patronage. BEDFORD & WA RNER. t
! |M|O|D|O|C[ STOMACH BITTERS • WIM.PONTIVBI.TCVM r ._. Dyspepsia, Chills and .jSAW f Rtowwt Fever, Kidney Disease, Liver Complaint, wiMjiEk rUrifier. E 800 REWARD FOR ANYOF THE ABOVE CASES THAT THIS MEDICINE WILL NOT CURE OR HELF. They wffl atipinlste tho Mcretlv. organ., assist digestion, nroduee a healthy and laxative aflbat and remove aft varieties of disense calculated to under-mfte th. vigor“clI theVo" v. mXwS’iCte protect and build up the vital strength and energy while removing causes of disease, and operating as a enre; but are no less useful as a preventive ot all classes of similar ailments by building up th. system to a good and perfect state of health, and making it proof against disease. One bottle alone
RENSSELAER, JASPER COUNTY, INDIANA, FRIDAY APRIL 11, 1884.
SUEWIFS "ALE. BT virUc of a cart Had of aMecreo to ma i ruttd hem the Clerk »f the Jasper Circuit Caart, la a aanae whe ain Marlon L. Saitler was plaintiff, and James H. W Hard. Sidney S. HsaelSaa.Natisaisl Cook, Kate C. Coak. James F»n«le Crawl y. Bobart Crowley, ffvnthia S. Stanton. Alpheus Stanton. Cornelia Amt Arnold. Ahielir Parker. Oacar F. Parker, Jahn K. Cook, Carelime «. Willard. James H. Tallman and Sea- n Tallman wore d feudanta. roqulrl g me lemak, ths sum of Two Hundred and Twenty..P?n. arß »M Twenty Cents [$2W »)) together g l . I n tn*dßt and l asts, I will expose at Pub 1c SATURDAY, THE Srd DAT Off Ma Y. IBM, between the boars of 1» o’clock a. m. and 4 o’cIdCK p. m. of said d y, at the doer of the Ceiirt House in the T wn of Bansselaer, Jasper county, Indiana, tbs rents and profits, for a t rm no Re C a?EMatZX M wit: C ‘ r *' *" OW ,l « dßMrt * cd ' The southeast quarter 14 of section twentyeight 0B), township thirty-two (S 2 north, range Mven (7) weiff, Jasper county, Indiana. And should"snch rents and profits not sell for a sußclent sum to discharge said Decree, interest and costa, I will, at the same time aed place, expose to sale the fee-simple of said Real Estate, °k 80 milc J l fh ere °f >s shall be sofficient to discharge sa Id Decreo, interest and costs. Ba - e 7i n be made without relief, and witi.i ®" t ‘equity ot redemption, and la accordance With the order of Court in said Decree April 5. I M 4- 11 J o? MN W - Sheriff.
aHEBIFFS SALE. BT ffirtne of a certified eopy of a Decree to me directed from the Clerk of the Jasper Circuit Cowxt, in a can so wherein Henry R Bond, the BqnitableTrnat Co., was plaintiff Bedford, ilhabeth Bedford’ ton, Philo Bemia.ton, Eliphaloh Uomington, Wulinnt W. HamaaeU, Walter A. i * Machine Cesapany, hJ a w*2 ”** b * r « WllliaßsC. Ilbbard, Iranilin F, Spec ear, Aeeiphns B. Bartlett. Deere B d.feod«^ M ? an7 ’ •“ d ® ra »»l« >'• Fnrgison were defendant*, requring ate to make the earn el Twenty.fiye BundretTajKj » or t y lou , Dollars and P-bi?c {W> “ MJ ’ X WIU “ SATURDAY, THE SdjDAY OF MAY, ISM, between th* hours of 10 o'clock a. m and 4e’ Honso P ’i?‘;kf B» ,dd »y, altbe door of the Court i£Sa«4"E , ,l“ r ’' »^.! t ’ ne, . c,lls ‘ at *, h * south-west corner of the ?2o’ t^ n V* t i> < | UarU ' r . of B,,t ion twenty-nine 8h l P lw “W nine (29) north, range six fUOiTa 1 **•'**eastene Hundred I! s nJlir 40 ? r *l*' thes * north one hundred welt t on?l?»* l f a J do ]‘r 1 * ttUll!j6, '' / ») rod8 > ‘lienee west one hundred aud forty (140) rods to the west of B e aid«lt'’ eCtlOD ' l .‘ he , l,Cß 80 « th on we“t Ihie ono*kaii*/*^l?, k,nt V* dand twenty-six and one hall (126!4)reds t, the place of beginning. And should such rents and profits net soil for a t* discharge said Decree, jntsrest and costs, I will, at the same time and place expose to sale the feo-aimplo of said Real Mstate’ ah/?, lun * h n th * 1 * 01 ' “h 1111 '»*’ sulUslsnt to dial eha ge said Decree, interest and costs. aeeM: :^k^h/^r U c i f th^o“bri, L 9, ;a'}3V U- * ™W»LL, B h.riff*-
NON’-EBsidenT notice, State of Ifidiastt, Jasper County, as* 8. Clifton, James M Clifton. Thomas M GiMton. Samuel S. Clifton, Daniel L. Mallatt. Nettie B. Mallatt Charles Mallatt. Richard Mallett, U'h**« "’. mX? The Union Central Life Insurance Company of Cincinnati, Ohio, and Edwin Clark, are hereby h? 1 mn thßt ® j ra J’™ Clarlt ’ Administrator, with the Will annexed, of Estate of Thomas L Klifton deceased, has filed his petition In the Circuit Court in and for said co.-nty, praying for an order to. sell Real Bstate of said decedent to pay debts makjng thorn defendants. Said petition will stand for hearing on the first day of the next regular Bald C a “rt. commoneing on Monday, the 9d day of June, 1884. y ’ l —. Witness tho Clerk and Seal of said ■j seal. I Court this 2d day of April, 1884 < —x— > CHARLES fl. PRICE, Clerk . „ , 100 . Jasper Circuit Court. April t>, 1884.—56 25. NON-RESIDENT NOTICE. State of Indiana, Jasper Connty, ss: Jacob H. Frank, —. Frank, his wife, Renben H. Frank, Frank, his wife, Abraham Kuhn, Jacob Netter, 8 muel Kuhn and Solomon Lobe, not lfled that Ephraim Fleming,has filed his esmplaint in the Circuit Conrt. in and for said county, against them asking for a decree quiot'ng title to certain Real Estate. Said cause will stand for trial on the 2d day of the next regular Term of said Court, conttnenc. Ing on Monday the 2d day of June. 1884. < | Witness the Clerk and S'-alofsnid ■lSbal-I Ceurt, his 8d day of April, 1884. 1 —’ CHARLES H. PRICE. Clerk * „ „ , _ , Jasper Circuit tenrt. . R „ 8 ; ®wlggins, plff’s att’ys. April 5,1884—55 T NOTICE. State of Indiana, Jasper County, ss: u MalJ g |e Castleman. Castleman, her husband, Rachel Patrick, and Patrick, h r husband. ate hereby notified that Denuis McLaughlin has filed bis complaint in the Circuit Court, in and for said County, asking fer the Foreclosure of a Mortgage against tnein, and others. Said cause will stand for trial on the second day of the next regular Term of said Court, coinmeucing on Monday, the 2d day of June, loOW* I I Witness tho Clerk and seal of 4 Seal. > said Court this 9d day of April, 18-4. — f CHARLES H. PRICE, Clerk » o' * , t. . , Jasper Circuit Court. . R -„ 8 - *Z- Dwiggins, plff’s att’ys. Aprils, 1884.—15.
TURNED TOO MANY PAGES.
Three or /our miles out of Eastport, Ga., a negro was taken sick a few weeks ago. A brother of color, who had bo’t himself a cheap med Cal treatise, volun. tiered to eure the pat ent for folr bushels of sweet petatoes, tfe had not docu ered him over three days, however, be* fore the patient was cold iu"death. A white doctor living in the town happened to be passing and was cat ed in. When he had tasted the medicine, which was n a trail jug, fatasK?d: “What disease* Id yea decur fort ’ •‘Poll evil, anh. ’ “ W bat? Who ever heard of a man having pell evil? That is a horse dis* ease.” The other at once opened his book to page 79 and said; “R ckon you’ll find it right dar, sah.” “Yes,” said the doctor,.'ns ho thumbed tl • leaves over, ‘ but the diseases of man are net found iu this department. This is headed ‘Ailments of Live Steck'.” “Fo’ de Lawd,” gasped the negro, as be suafchid the book aud hurriedly tun * ed the leav> s, “fo’ de Lawd, if 1 didh’t turn overlive pages too many! I meant to hit him fvr consunjpshuu aud billyus fever.”-j-Dctrolt Free Press.
LOGAN.
Some History as She is Dug Up Showing When the Illinois Piairie Dog Ceased to be a Rebel. Chicago News: “John A. Logan falls in, quits his dirty work, and even wants a regiment.” So ran a Washington dispatch to the Tribune July 8,1861. This was three months after Fort Sumter had <been fired on, and during all that time the attitude of Mr. Logan had been an encouragement to the enemies of tlie Union, and a matter of frequent inquiry a along his friends. To be silent at such a time was treason. Mr. Logan had been worse than silent. His conduct had been so antagonistic to the Northern spirit that no less radical action than enlistment in the Union Army would have suffi ciently demonstrated his conversion. That this is no campaign deduction picked from the half-forgotten history of those days of trial to injure General Logan is shown by contemporaneous publications His attitud e was the subject of the greatest solicitude among his neighbors, "orrespondence in Northern papers from Southern Illinois was filled with the discussion. His immediate friends and intimates were more than suspected of aiding the confederacy. A dispatch to the Tribune from JJairo, June 4,1861, told how J. D. Pulley had been sent to Springfield in charge of Lieutenant Bertram, and Dr. Blanchard, Logan’s brother-in-law, had been arrested at De Soto as a rebel. Williamson county, in which Logan’s influence was paramount, was claimed to be strongly for secession by the Sarbondale Times of June 15. An editorial in the Shaw neetown Mercury about the same date asked: “Wherj is oiy Congressman, John A. Lo-
gan? Rumor after rumor comes to us concerning the position of our Representative* John A. Logan, about the difficulties that threaten to destroy our Union, and we deem it our duty to ask him to come out and define his position, as the time for neutrality has passed.” The Harrisburg Chronicle re-echoed this request for Logan toishowhis colors, adding: “As he will be called in a few days to take his place in the councils of the Nation, his constituents have a right to know his position.” IZhe first gun of the rebellion was fired April 12, and after two months, when Ithe man who was not for the Union was against it, Mr. Logan’s constituents were still left in distressing doubt as to his loyalty. At last he wrote a letter to the St. Louis Republican denying in a perfunctory way that he was k secessionist. It created the opposite impression to that it was intended to convey, and the Congressman whose District had furnished recruits to Jeff Davis’ army still remained under a cloud. A letter from Washington, published July 8,1861, coupled Logan with the clique which was bent on doing the most possible mischief in the loyal organization of the House But suddenly Logan saw a great light, and the author of the “black laws” of the State —the man who had denounced the Republicans of Northern Illinois as “blighted by the contaminating touch of abolit ion ism;” who had gloried in doing “the dirty work of the i Democracy m arresting and returning fugitive slaves,” and who for three months had preserved silence fell'into line, quit his “dirty work” and asked for a regiment. Illinois has rewarded him. over and over again for the service he did the Union at the head of that regiment, but it cannot ask the Republii can party to honor with-the ■ Presidency‘the man who in 1 the hour of its peril faltored.
NUMBER 11
Zhat honor must be reserved for men whose loyalty was never even suspected. Mr. Keif er has just been the subject of investigation by a —ongressional “ommittee. He has not gained in reputation by the examination. Zhe Republican papers generally are discreetly silent on the subject; but one, which assumes a sort of water-gruel independence, says: “Zhe Committee virtually agrees in saying that ex-Speakei Keifer has lied, and that he has attempted to fortify his falsehood by the false witness of disreputable persons.” “his is a nice position for th eRe publican leader to occupy. But what matter? He is neither better nor worse than his Republican associates hi Zongress, or he would not have found his way to their head.—New York World. •
Henry Ward Beecher may be “cranky” on some noints, but, he carries a level head on the tariff. He said to a Louisville reporter last Sunday: Zhe one question which is bound to grow as the days pass, is that of taxation and its reduction. “he people are demanding it, and their voice will have to be heeded. Zhen, too, one issue will attractmore attention in the future than it is now, great and debatable as it is. It is the question of free trade. No half way measures will do, there is no debatable line,and the man who attempts to mount the fence will sadly miss his calculations. It must be free trade or protection.— People are not yet prepared to raise money by direct taxation, though it is the true plan. A tariff with moderate protection won’t do, for every bit of protection it contains is the sour particle which will set the whole mess to fermenting and soon completely spoil it.
It is not merely that Gen. Boynton has been vindicated, but that his vindication of necessity brands Mr. Keifer as al convicted liar, defamer and per j urer. He was not dragged into this case, he made it himself. He preferred the charges, and he supported them by a solemn oath. If Gen. Boynton is innocent, as all agree, then his accuser is guilty of manufacturing a frightful charge against a man upon whom he desired vengeance, and of using his whole political influence, as well as swearing his alleged honor, to work a private revenge on an innocent man. If this is true, then Mr. Keifer is not fit for a seat in congress, nor fit for the company of any decent man, wr for anything but a striped and a place in the penitentiary We commend to the attention of congress the fact that, by the finding of his own committee, it has in its own midst a man who ought to be scourged with* contempt and loathing from association with his honorable fellow men. —St. Paul Pioneer Press. At least send him in retirement with his Brother-fraud Hayes.
!£he workmen engaged in the well-protected salt and lumber industries of the Saginaw valley have sent circulars all over the country stating that their condition is “worse than the old bonded slavery of the south,” notwithstanding “their employers are making a* princely profit One would expect such news from | indtistrif s exposed to competition f rom the “pauper labor of Europe,” but surely protected industries should tell a. different story, if the protection theory is true.—Detroit News. Indianapolis News: In 184( it oust more to haul wheat from Marion county to Lawrenceburg, then the nearest market, than it now costs<to ship it to Liverpool.
